ROYAL INSTITUTION. Friday, March 28, 1840.

ROYAL INSTITUTION. Friday, March 28, 1840.

79 the particulars. As Mr. Chavasse contemI shall plates the apublication of the case, to its most make only very brief allusion distinguishing feat...

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79 the particulars. As Mr. Chavasse contemI shall plates the apublication of the case, to its most make only

very brief allusion

distinguishing features. A lady was attacked about the fifth month of her preg-

ROYAL INSTITUTION. Friday, March 28, 1840. LECTURE

by haemorrhage and pain, accomON THE panied by the expulsion of a mass of hydatids, probably three or four ounces. STATISTICS OF MORTALITY AND The haemorrhage ceased for a short time, DISEASES IN LONDON. but returned at intervals for upwards of a year, and was attended occasionally by By Dr. GEORGE GREGORY, Physician to the severe pain, and the expulsion of a single Small-Pox Hospital. hydatid resembling a hot-house grape. The DR. GREGORY commenced by stating, that symptoms became more alarming, the hmmorrhage resisting every mode of treatment the Bill for the Registration of Births, which could be devised. A state of anaemia Deaths, and Marriages, passed the legislaultimately ensued, and, on the conviction ture in August, 1836, but was not brought that the patient’s life depended on the re- into operation until July, 1837. It had now moval of the haemorrhage, it was determined been two years and nine months in operato use a stimulating injection. The third tion, and he proposed, on the present occainjection was impregnated with oxyde of sion, to lay before the members of the Instiiron, and, after using it several times, its tution the results of the Act. Continental strength was increased by the addition of nations had long enjoyed the benefits of one drop of the tinctura ferri sesquichloridi national registration, and it had been long to each ounce of the oxyd. injection, and desirable that England should have the gradually increasing the quantity of the same advantages. The Registrar-General tincture to four drops. Its employment wasz, had published a valuable Annual Report, followed by so much pain and tenderness, conveying important information; and on as not only to require a suspension of the the 5th of January of the present year was injection, but also to demand a mild anti- published the first of a weekly series of phlogistic treatment. At one time severe Bills of Mortality, under the sanction of the inflammation supervened, and the patient same authority. These Bills were on an seemed to be sinking under irritative fever, improved plan, affording a fund of curious but after this no further discharge took and useful information, and their accuracy place; but, at length, under the tonic plan was so great that perfect reliance might of treatment, she perfectly recovered, and always be placed in them. They were the uterus has since resumed its natural likely hereafter to attract a large share of functions. In this case the removal of the public attention ; they afforded to Insurance disease is clearly referrible to the stimulating Companies and Friendly Societies a solid action of the iron on the lining membrane. foundation for all calculations on the value The treatment of acephalocysts in the uterus of life; the political economist would find by iron has much to recommend it; that in them many valuable hints on the growth metal, indeed, has been supposed to exert a of population ; the moralist would be able specific action in such cases. However to trace in them the effects of concentration this may be, the principle is quite inappli- on the character and habits of a people ; and cable to the hydatid formations of pregnancy, the physician would find them to present him and injections of iron can only act like sti- with universal information in every departmulating injections generally. In order to ment. The metropolis, also,-that miniature ensure the injection reaching the cavity of world in which we lived-would always the womb, it must be conveyed there by prove an interesting subject of inquiry, in means of an elastic tube attached to a small whatever point of view it was considered. gum-elastic bottle. The tube should have On all these accounts the lecturer was dea round opening at its extremity, and should sirous of bringing the subject before his be passed a little distance within the neck, audience. In order to make the subject or even into the cavity of the womb. fully understood it would be necessary to In conclusion, Gentlemen, I have merely give some information, which might not be to remark-what, indeed, you must now be possessed by all; he should, therefore, 1st, aware of-that an extensive field of inquiry supply that preliminary information ; 2nd, is open to the diligent labourer in his inves- give a general idea of the mechanism by tigations of this disease. We have very which the Registration Act was carried on ; much to learn on the subject of uterine and, 3rd, the general results which it had hydatids. If any really instructive account effected. Cities might, in some degree, deaden the of the disease has been published, I have not had the good fortune to meet with it;; natural desire we had to inquire into the and, although defective in a practical point affairs of our neighbours, but they did not of view, Mad. Boivin’s treatise is the best I extingliish it; the newspapers were looked have read. to, daily, for information respecting births, nancy

80 deaths, and marriages : the information thus afforded, however,

was

exceedingly

meagre. The ° Times " of that day recorded 3 births, 2 marriages, and 5 deaths in the metropolis ; this was about the daily average, the total in January last being 72 births, 40 marriages, and 140 deaths; that was an average of 5 deaths, 3 births, and 2 marriages daily. A reasonable curiosity would prompt the inquiry as to what proportion these numbers actually bore to the real amount of births, marriages, and deaths, which took place in the metropolis in 1 day,1 month, or 1 year. We should hardly, however, stop short with that question; all would have a natural curiosity to ascertam at what age the several individuals diedof what diseases they fell victims. Occasionally the newspapers gratified us on those points. Many, however, might carry their desire of information further, and wish to

9. Was London, with its immense popula. tion,closely packed, and breathing the same air, a healthy or an unhealthy locality? To

what

cause was

its healthiness

to be attributed? An answer to these

or

unhealthi.

ness

know1. What were the prevalent disorders by which the metropolitan population was carried off, at any particular year or season. 2. What districts of the metropolis were healthy, and which afforded most employment to the doctor and undertaker, the low districts or the high ones, the densely populated or the suburban districts. 3. What ages of life were most fruitful of occupation to those individual members of the community ; and what were the proportions of coffins made for the young, the and the aged? 4. What influence did atmospheric variations, and the peculiarities of our climate exert on the disorders and mortality of the metropolis ; and what was the relative mortality in different seasons? What was the

adult,

proportion of the metropolitan population that died of old age and natural decay, and of such chronic disorders as were incidental to the advance of life, compared with those who were carried off by fevers, epidemic dis-

interesting questions

involved an acquaintance with the statistics of disease and mortality ; the object of the lecturer was to explam this, so far at least as it applied to the metropolis. Some, how. ever, might ask what was the meaning of medical or vital statistics? It was the science which illustrated the natural history of man in health and disease, by the applica. tion of numbers, having for its object the determination of the rate of mortality in the different regions of the world ; to ascertain the comparative salubrity of different coun. tries, and the kind, extent and severity of disease prevailing in different districts, in reference to sexes, ranks, trades, occupsttions and ages, and under varying ctrcumstances of political existence and sorial comfort. Bounduries uf the Old and New lJIetl’ol’olis. -In 1593, when bills of mortality were first issued, the metropolis was held only to isdude the City and Liberties (109 parishes) ; in 1660, the city of Westminster and the borough Southwark ; and such por. tions of Middlesex and Surrey as loy cuntiguous to these, and were within call, had been added. The total number of parishes was then 130. As the metropolis extended parish was added after parish, till in 175S 147 parishes were included in the It’rm metropolis; in 1831, Mr. Rickman extended the term still rnore widely, but not wide enough to meet the necessities of the case. The Kegistrar-General had acted most wisely, by taking the more enlarged expla. nation of the term metropolis, and had in. eluded under it all those districts whose character was metropolitan. Any one, for

.orders, and the maladies, such as small-pox, itisLat)(-e, might, at a glance, pfrce)Bethe measles, hooping-cough, typhus, and cho- ditff fence between the inhabitants of Camlera, and such acute and rapid diseases as berweil and Croydon, one being mctropo’ the other rural. The suburban popawere independent of age ; and what was the proportion of cases whIch fell to the care lation,in ib general character, amnlgantated of the physician, and what to that of the perfectly with the Illllre centrally metropo’

litan,

litan. This was owrnt; to the cnustant inthe number of births in the tercourse taking pl.H’C between the parties. metropolis,a5comparedwithtOepopulation’? Thernetropolts was situated oil au srPa of and were they stillicient to contpensate for 70 square miles, was of all irregutar figure, the annual mortality? Did population in- of 9 miles in diameter, and, taking St. crease? If so, at what rate? What was Pajl’s as the cetitrat point, extended nearly five miles in all directions. Its extreme the amount of influx from rural districts? 7. What relation existed between the points, north and south, were Stoke !Bewamount of sickness and mortality ? In other ingtou and Dulwich, aud, east and west, words, how many sick were there in London Hamfxersmtth aud Woolwich. The great to 1 death? At what rate do the same dis- dihUnction between the old and new metro’ .eases incidental to man prove fatal? polis consisted ru
were

Fot*

81

ham, Hammersmith and Chelsea, on the 400,000 to its population, or as many as the These together added one third to entire population of the metropolis in the west. the old metropolis. The Registrar-General reign of Charles the Second,-a fact which had divided London into five great divisions, seems scarcely credible. It will be inteNorth London, South London; East, West, resting to observe if this calculation be and Central London: South London was defined by the Thames ; North London was bounded by Oxford-street, Tottenham-courtroad, Clerkenwell, and up to Hackney ; Central London had for its boundaries the - City-road, Old-street, the Minories, TowerHill, and the Thames; the Eastern district extended to the Lea River; the Western had for its eastern boundaries Wardour-street, Princes-street, Leicester-square, down to

the Strand.

Population.-It is very difficult to determine the population of the metropolis in the 17th and 18th centuries. Major Graunt, in the time of Charles the Second, estimated the number of inhabitants in London at 384,000. According to Mr. Finlaison, all England and Wales, in 1730, contained only 5,687,993, and it doubled itself in 93 years; for, in 1821, all England and Wales contained lli millions; and, in 1831, 13,897,187. The metropolis then contained about one-ninth of the whole kingdom. On the same principle, London contained, one hundred years ago, somewhat more than half a million (568,000). We had now better means of ascertaining the exact amount of the population. It might not be known to all, that, by a Bill passed in the year 1800, it was dccreed that a decennial census should take place. It had already taken place four times, viz., in 1801-11-21, and 31, and another would take place in May, 1841. Measures had been already taken to proceed with it. In the extended metropolis the population In 1821

....

In 1821 1831

....

And the

....

total,

in

was.... ,, ,,

.... ....

1840,

1,328,671 1,328,671 1,594,890

was

computed

at

1,955,000. Growth of Metropolitan Populatiora.—The metropolis, ever since the year 180!, has steadily advanced in population, at the rate of 18 per 1000 annually, or nearly two per Some districts have, however, incent. creased much more than others ; for, while Central London has received but a very small addition, the northern division has been of very rapid growth, increasing at the rate of three per cent. per annum ; in nine years it is calculated to have added H7,000 to its population ; that is, from 1831 to 1840, to have increased from 297,000 to 414,000. An increase of 18 per 1000 gives a total annual increase to London of nearly 36,000, a population equal to that of York! According to calculation the population of London in 1841 will exceed 2,000,000. In ten years (1831-40) London has added

borne out by the results of the made in 1841.

census

to be

Density of Population.-It may create some surprise to know that here in every square mile of surface there live 26,000 inhabitants. In the five south-western counties of England, including many large towns, as Plymouth, Exeter, &c., the number of inhabitants to each square mile is only 230 ;g that is, in the same extent of ground which. is occupied by 113 persons in London, there is only one in Devonshire and Cornwall. Now, can we explain this extraordinary growth of the population? The registry of births is incomplete ; parents, by the Act, are compelled to give information on application being made to them, but not to initiate it. This defect in the Registration Act was foreseen, aud a discussion took place upon it in Parliament. It was thought by the opponents of the compulsory registration of births, that it might disconnect the naming of children from the holy rite of baptism, and admission to the Church. The difliculty on this subject was undoubtedly great, and one very unfortunate for statistics : it prevents us from saying exactly how much of the increase of the metropolis is owing to the excess of births, and how much to the influx of emigrants. The registration of births is so far imperfect, but the poorer orders are becoming more used to it, and, perhaps, in a few years,a compulsory clause willbeadded, to meeta few refractory cases, without offendiog the religious scruples of any party in the State. At present we are therefore left somewhat to conjecture on this point. The Registrar-General, however, calculated that over the whole country there are, to every 1000 of the population, 20 deaths, 8 marriages, and 30 births annually : the births, therefore, exceed the deaths by one-third ;; the deaths in the metropolis being 52,660, one-third of which is 17,333 ; this makes a total of 69,333 births : this increase alone would not be sufficient to account for the increase of population, for London receives 90,000 annually. Hence, to keep up its population, and add to it 18 per 1000, calculating the births at 70,000, there must be still 20,000 strangers, and these chiefly adults.

Relative Ages of Population Coexisting.A full understanding of the new Tables requires some knowledge of a favourite problem with all statistical writers, viz., out of a population of 10,000 souls, how many are young (1 to 15); how many adults (15 to 60); how many aged? The proportion of these is pretty nearly the same in all coun-

82 there may be slight variation from local circumstances, the influx of In Sweden, in 1830, there strangers, &c. were under fifteen, 33 ; adults, 59; aged, 8 ; in 100. In England, in 1821, 40 were youug, 53 adults, and 7 aged ; and in London, in former times, there were 33 young, 62 adults, and 5 aged. In the summer of 1840, Mr. Farr calculated that in London there will be

tries, although

Under 15....632,833

or

Adults......215,618 Aged....... 106,849,,

35 per cent. 60 5 -



1,955,000 100 That is, thrice

people, and old people.

as many adults as young six times as many children as

improve their bills; the lecturer held a draft of an Act of Parliament, to carry which the Company spent nearly £1000 without It was creditable to the Parish Clerks of London, that the bills never cost the country one farthing. In 1832, the cho. lera year, these bills again attracted much attention. The machinery of the old bills was neces. sarily imperfect ; many were buried out of London, and some in the grounds of Dis. senters, uuknown to the orthodox clerks, and thus escaped registration. Since 1837, these bills had become good for nothing. The total number of deaths registered by them in 1838, was 18,266, being an average of only 350 weekly ; this, we now know, was less than half of the real mor. tality, which averaged 754 weekly. In the palmy days of the old bills, they registered only 64 per cent. of the real mortality, 36 per cent. remaining unregistered. In 1838, the Parish Clerks registered 18,266 deaths, to which must be added, by the new Tables, 20,984, making a mortality in the old dis. tricts of 39,210. Allowing one-third for the new districts, which would amount to 13,488, the total mortality is breught bp to 52,698.

success.

Proportion of the Sexes.-In all parts of the world more males are born than females. Mr. Finlaison says, that for 1,000,000 females born, there are born 1,050,985 males, making an excess of nearly 51,000 in every million ; the proportion is 83 to 79, or 21 to 20. The excess of males, however, disappears at a very early period of life, so that at every period of age after 15 there are more females living than males; and thus, in a general enumeration of the population, Machinery of the New Tables.-England and where adults always predominate, we have the females in excess. In 1831, there were Wales is divided into 25 grand registering of which the metropolis is 1, and 739,719 males, and 855,171 females, in Lon- divisions, Wales 25. The metropolis is divided into a 8 of females to 7 don ; being proportion 32 superintending registrars’ districts, and males. 125 registrars’ districts. A weekly return is Old Bills of Mortality.-The parochial re- made up by each of the 125 registrars, and gistration of births, deaths, and marriages, forwarded by post to the General Registry was one of the early fruits of the Reforma- Office, at the same hour every Monday. This tion ; the parish registers of christenings weekly Table contains all the deaths reo and burials began in 1538. The Metropo- gistered up to the close of the previous litan Bills of Mortality owed their origin Saturday. On an average, four days elapse to the anxiety of the public about their from the death to the registration ; therefore own danger. They began on Dec.21, 1592, the deaths registered in the week from and were under the care of the incorporated Sunday March 15 to Saturday the 22nd, are, parish clerlcs, who had their origin in 1233. in fact, the deaths that occurred between The year 1593 was a plague year, the deaths Thursday March 12 and Wednesday March from whichwere 11,503. In 1657, the Billsof 18. The weekly Tables are sent in on Mon. Mortality assumed nearly the same form day, made up on Tuesday, printed on Wedthat they nuw exhibit. Some little improve- nesday, and published on Thursday. Many ments, however, took place in them in 1665, of the metropolitan registrars are medical the great plague year, when 68,590 died men. In all England and Wales there are of that disease in London ; the total deaths 2193 registrars, and of these 527, nearly a being 97,306, out of a population not exceed. third, are medical men ; so that great ing half a million, so that every fifth person accuracy with regard to the cause of death died ! The old bills were merely enutnera- is ensured. The cause of death, moreover, tions of christenings and burials, not of in the great majority of cases, is certified births and deaths ; and were made out from by the attending medical practitioner,so that the application of parties for interment and the system has now attained extreme perbaptism. A searcher, generally some elderly fection, and it is doubtful if a single female, sworn to a diligent performance of death occurs which escapes registration. ber office, proceeded to the house where the Dr. Gregory then gave a description of the deceased person lay, and ascertained his weekly Tables published by the Registrar* age, And the cause of his death. The bill,s General, several of which have appeared in He thought it due to the were carefully made up in the middle of the THE LANCET. Istat century, but after that many parishes British Association of Science to state, that of diseases began to fall off.The Company of Parish the plan for the re&trektion Clerks, in March 1819, made an effort to emanated from that body.

83

General Results.-Every thing conspires that one-half of those born do to show that there is a gradual diminution of mortality all over England. The value of human life is slowly but steadily on the increase. Not that there is any material change in the number of years allotted for man to live ; for the human frame remains much the same as in the days of the Psalmist ; but the average duration of life, or the number of years a child at biitti may be expected to live, is on the increase. This principle is strikingly illustrated in the Tables of Mortality. Thus, in 1740 there died in London 30,811, while in 1832, which was the cholera year, there died in the same districts 28,606; and this too with au inThe mortality in the crease of population. middle of the last century, however, was very large, and is attributable to the great

consumption of spirituous liquors, alike

ruinous to the health and morals of the people. The new Tables afford the most faithful declaration of the number of deaths. In 18tH, in the second half of the year, there were 24,959, making a yearly total in round numbers of 50,000. In 1838, the deaths were 52,698. Estimating the population at 1,850,000, this is 1 in 36 of the whole population, or 28 per 1000. This was a weekly average of 1013, 144 per day, 6 per hour, 1 every 10 minutes. So that if the great bell of St. Paul’s was to toll ten minutes for each individual that dies, it would not cease tolling from the 1st of January to the 31st of December.

Mortality in London.-The average of 1838

as this apfair average. It corresponds accurately with Mr. Edmond’s calculations, deduced from the parish registers, 1813-1830 ; also with Mr. Milne’s estimate, 1801-1810. The mortality in the first 11 weeks, 1840, has fallen below the average ; the deaths were nearly uniform, and averaged 900. The metropolis is now, and has been for ten or twelve weeks, very healthy. Mr. Fisher had informed the lecturer, that the police force had never been so healthy as since the commencement of the present year. In the middle of the last century the metropolitan mortality was estimated at 1 in 32 of the whole population, or 30 per 1000. The deaths in the whole of England and Wales are 1 in 45, or 22 per 1000. 1838 is made the standard year for comparison.

1000 per week, pears, it is probably was

Mortality

at

and, large

a

different Ages.—The

extraorin the early years of life has been noticed in all ages. It is very striking in the metropolis, but even more so inother districts. Mr. Rickman, speaking of the mortality in early life in the manufacturing districts of England, where the population increases rapidly, the proportion of young persons being consequently very large, says

dinary mortality

not

attain

the age of 12 years ; half of the males were dead at 7, half the females at 17, making an average of 12. Such is the effect of density, confined locality, and the habits of a manufacturing people, upon the infantile population. In the West-Riding of Yorkshire, a manufacturing district, half of those born are gone at 18. In the North-Riding, an agricultural district, whose population is more stationary, the half are not dead till 38. In London half the deaths occur before 21. Of 336,000 deaths in all England from July 1, 1837, to July 1,1838, 71,888 were under 1 year, 27,908 at 1 year, 14,983 at 2 years. In London, two-fifths of the population do not reach their fifth year. The increase of the value of infantile life during the last 100 years would be observed by the following calculations. Deaths under 2 years, 1837-8, 99,796, being a proportion to the entire mortality of 295 to 1000. (In London it is only 290 in 1000.) In the 5 years 1733-7, the proportion of deaths under 2 years of age was 393 to 1000. In Manchester the deaths under 2 years of age were 375 per 1000. This exhibits an improvement of a most extraordinary kind in the rate of mortality in the course of 100 years, giving us reason to believe thata very great opening for improvement still exists in this department of medicine. The annual waste in the three great divisions of life is very interesting. It varies in different localities. According to the average of 1838, there were in London the following deaths;1in Under 16 .... Above 60 .... 11 ,," 62 Above 19 10 192 35 Under 16

....

25

....

466

....192

60....

1010

Out of every

Company

46

or

100

Association

1000 persons in the middle

con-

of life (15-60) that meets in London, 16 will be carried off before this day next year. The House of Commons, containing 658 members, may be expected to lose by death 13 members annually.

taining

period

The Law of Climacteric Decay. The healthiest period of man’s life is from 7 to 12, weakly children having been weeded out. From seven to the age of 12 mortality diminishes. It is impossible to avoid observing, en passant, that beautiful provision of Nature, which has rendered period of education, the age ofthe school-boy creeping like snail unwillingly to school." This most important period of human life, during which we buckle on the armour with which we are to fight our way through the world, the most free from interruptions. Gradually, from 12 to 24, mortality slowly but steadily augments. At 24 irregularities commence, and continue to the age of 84, a period of 60 years, when mortality again becomes -

84 so continues to the utmost verge Mortality of the Sexes.-The followingare of existence. among the most striking results of the regis. The law of this irregularity constitutes a tration Tables, with reference to the com. curious doctrine in statistics-the doctrine parative mortality of the sexes. In of climacteric decay, or the periods at which life, the mortality among boys is mnch mortality is most prevalent, between the greater than in gifts. In 1837-8, there died of males in all England under 1 year,33,990; ages of 24 and 84. The notion of climacteric periods has ex- of females, 31,898 ; being a majority of isted from a very early period. The Greeks 8092. This seems to have been foreseen by expressed it by terms, signifying ladder, the Author of Nature, and the increased or step, or climbing the ladder of life. proportion of births in the male sex was There is an ascending and a descending made the compensating measure. The not. scale. It was always held that certain years recurrent maladies affect the two sexes The equally ; so do typhus and many other were more fatal to life than others. ancient notions of Pliny and Aulus Gel- acute aud chronic disorders. In middle life lius were, that these years were multiples the mortality among males is greater than of 7 and 9-the ascending being 7,14, 21; the among females, in the proportion of 520 to descending, 49, 63, 81--the two latter being 493. Nevertheless, there are some few ex. the grand climacteric. What foundation for ceptions to this rule; consumptive affections these notions do we receive from statistics ? 7 are more frequent in females than males, in and 14 are quite correct ; 21 was onlyconven- the propor’.ion of 41 to 37 ; cancer, in the tional. 18 or 9 X 2 would be a better age proportion of 2 to 1 ; dropsy, S to 7 ; hoopfor fixing the full development of the bodily ing cough, 49 to 37. Violent deaths are, and mental power, than 21. We escape outof however, more frequent in males, in the pro. the old prejudice only in the cases of our portion of 3 to 1. Affections of the heart sovereigns, who are considered to he of age are more frequently fatal in men, in thepro. at 18, an Act of Parliament having been portion of 26 to 19. Females attain a greater In 1837 there died, at above passed to make them so. The periods of age. 49, 63, and 81, receive no countenance from the age of seventy-seven years, 73 men statistical investigations ; on the contrary, to 111 females : Total annual mortality in all of them are very light years with respect London, 27 males to 25 females ; all to mortality. England, 75 males, 73 females. If the lee. There are, however, climacteric periods, turer were to speculate on the cause of the but these are not multiples of 7 or 9, but of superior longevity enjoyed by females, he 10. The periodical augmentation in mor- should attribute the circumstance, not to tality is noticed first at 30, but 40, 50, and any difference in their original conformation, for men were built of stronger ma. 80, also exemplify it. Some change in the nature of the constitu- terials, but to the healthier condition and tion takes place at these decennial periods, of temperament of the female mind, which, be. which we know nothing, rendering a man ing better regulated than ours, rose supemore liable to acute and fatal diseases at rior to the cares and anxieties which shorten thattime than at intervening periods. In Lon- the days of men. don the order is 40, 50, 60, 70, 30, 80. In other localities, 60, 70, 40, 30, 50, 80; and Mortality in Seasons.—The old Tables are this is equally applicable to males and fe- valueless in this respect, and the new bills males. The years preceding and succeeding as yet afford no data on which we can rely. the decennial period are very light. Thus, In the first half of 1838, in all England, in 1837, in all England and Wales the fol, there died 28,638, in the second half 24,060. In London, the order of the seasons in relowing was the number of deaths :spect of salubrity is the following :—Au1932 29 2235 .... 59 tumn and summer, healthy ; spring and win. 30 ....2762 .... 60 .... 239-1 ter, unhealthy. In Paris there is the least 2113 31 1960 61 mortality in July, the greatest in April. In 39 1970 69 .... 224T Italy the order is reversed; March is the 40 70 .... 3348 2965 healthiest, August the most unhealthy month. In all healthy localities the propor41 23G1 1736 71 tion of deaths is greatest in cold seasons. 49 1897

steady, and

early

probably

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

50 51

....

....

2716 1701

DTortality of

in

different

Districts.-The rate

mortality is governed chiefly by density; A man at 59, therefore, has a worse life but comparative poverty and affluence, the than a man at 61; and yet it is singular that efficiency of ventilation, and the-measures the insurance offices acknowledge no such for the removal of impurities, contribute to law, the rate of insurance increasing steadily the result. The most unhealthy district of with the year of life. This law of decen- the metropolis is the eastern ; typhus and nial augmentation of mortality was first no- epidemic diseases rage in Whitechapel, ticed by Mr. Rickman in 1831. Shoreditch, and Bethnal-green;St. Giles’s

85 suburban complaints that carry off the great mass of Camber- the metropolitan population are very few, well and Hackney. St. George’s, Hanover- say 20 or 30; and a closer examination of square, is the most healthy parish in Lou- them points out the three principal sources don. Out of 1000 females living in White- of disease and mortality in the metropolis chapel 39 die annually. Of the same num- to beber,in St. George’s parish, only 17, which is 1. Original delicacy of frame, or the less than half. The average of London is structural and functional peculiarities im25 per 1000. The new street contemplated on the individual at birth, and transpressed ’to be made between St. Martin’s-lane and mitted from to offspring. To this Tottenham-court-road, and the removal of head we refer parent water in the head, convulsions, all old densely-crowded neighbourhoods, by affections of the above all, conand, lungs, the erection of new and wide streets, would These diseases occur chiefly besumption. add to the health of the various districts in tween birth and the age of 25. which such improvements were necessary. The in the body by 2. produced changes It is impossible to estimate too highly the The human value of all those improvements which give the mere influence of time.

tIle..-most unhealthy. The is the most healthy, districts are

’a,

centrifugal direction

to the

as

population.

frame is fitted

only

for

a

certain duration.

In all sea-ports and manufacturing towns, Changes take place which lead to apoplexy, the tendency is necessarily centripetal. palsy, asthma, dropsy, heart affections, and Hence the greater salubrity of London as natural decay. 3. Specific poisons received into the body compared with many of our manufacturing from without, and operating independently towns. of original contamination or the influence of Comparison with liacral Dislricts;-Deaths time, and attacking all habits and ages, as are always more numerous in cities than typhus fever, small-pox, measles, scarlet in rural districts. The five south western fever, hooping-cough, constituting the epicounties of England have a population demic class. The weekly average of all closely approximating the population of Lon- these, enumerated in 1838, was 901, out of don (1,600,000). In 1831, the deaths in the a total mortality of 1013. All complaints metropolis were 24,959 to 15,220 in the may be arranged under a fourth class, rural districts. When we reflect what Lon- or the accidental sources of disease don is-its crowded and dense population, and mortality; the principal of these are and the intemperate habits that prevail, child - birth, hydrophobia, accidents, inthe total want of air and exercise so essen- temperance, gout, rheumatism, and erysitial to health, which too many are doomed pelas. About nine-tenths of mankind in Lonto undergo, more especially those who gain don are carried off by the three first classes, their livelihood by their needle, from 9 in one-tenth by the latter section. Epidemic the morning till 11 at night, and, on some and pulmonic affections carry off together

than half of the population of London. In 1838, the weekly average of deaths But it is not so. It is less healthy, -truly, from epidemics was 265, from pulmonic than the rural districts, but far healthier diseases 275, 540, out of a total of than many continental cities. The following 1013. Epidemic diseases vary greatly in circumstances tend to render London healthy: their intensity and order of recurrence. In 1st. Its favourable locality ; the gravelly 1837, measles; 1838, typhus and small-pox; soil on which a large portion of it is built, and in 1839, scarlet fever.were the prevalent its gradual rise from the river to the sum- epidemics. mit of Hampstead Hill. There is no ague in London, nor was there in old times, to Still- born Children are not registered in affect its mortality ; but ague is not a fatal the new Tables. The old Tables gave an andisease; even in the West Indies it is a nual average of 900. To get an approxima2nild disorder, killing only 1 out of 160 who tion to the truth, you must double this numare affected by it. 2nd. The admirable ber for the additional districts, say 1800, system of sewers and under-drainage. which makes it about 1 in 38 of the births. 3rd. The width of the principal streets. It would be well if still-born children were 4th. The abundant supply of water, suf- registered, partly to ascertain if they are on ficiently pure for all practical purposes. the increase, and partly as grounds of com5th. The cleanly habits of the people. parison with other countries ; partly, also, 6th. The wealth of the people, which per- because the causes of still-birth are but litjnits the poor to enjoy a more nutritious diet tle known, and nothing is more likely to than can be had in Edinburgh, Dublin, and throw light on them than careful statistical

occasions,

till 2 in the

morning,—one might

expect that London would be

more

unhealthy.

making

Glasgaw. Comparative Mortality of different Diseases.

- A cursory observation of the Tables of mortality, old and new, will show that the

investigations. Convulsions.-This is the great disorder which the infantile population is carried off, but there has been a great diminution in

by

86 the numbers of late years. In the old Ta-’ bles we find that in 1741 the deaths by convulsions were 8479, or one-fourth of the total mortality. In 1731, 7986; in 1797, 4944 ; in 1829, 2761. By the new Tables in 1837, 3434 died of convulsions, and in 1838, 3684 ; being one-fifteenth of the total mortality. This was less than in 1697, 140 years ago, although the metropolis has nearly tripled its numbers since then. This immense saving in infantile life is owing to better management. Nearly all the cases of convulsions occurred in children. In 1840, out of 321 cases, 6 only were in adults. The following shows the comparative mortality by convulsions in three centuries :1696 1697 1698 1699

4480 4944 4480 4513

.. .. .. ..

1700 1708 1731 1740

4631 5902 7986 8479

.. .. .. ..

1827 1829 1833 1838

there fell victims to these diseases 3260 per. sons; and in 1838, 3692. Of those who have fallen victims to it in 1840, 383 are below 15, and 148 above 15, or nearly as 5 to 2.

It

2645

probable that thoracic complaints later period of life than the encephalic. When one avenue to death is closed, another is necessarily opened; hence we may see why vaccination increases the amount of deaths at periods of life sub. sequent to that at which small-pox used to carry off children. This has been denied, but it is strictly correct. Croup, though a very fatal, is not a very frequent malady. The total deaths by croup in London in 1827, were 124 ; 1829,123 ; 1833, 151 ; 1837, 300 ;

2761 2140

1837-8, 3310.

3684 ,

seems

occur

at

1838,

364.

a

Total in

England

and

Wales,

Epidemic Diseases.-Small-pox.-It is sur.

this disease should not only be found among the disorders affecting the mass of the people, but occupying a prominent place. Vaccination was discovered in 1798, 42 years ago, and had been largely practised: the National Vaccine Establishment had been instituted 32 years, yet, in the first half of 1837, 763 died of small-pox, making an Water tn the Head.—Convulsions, the annual total of 1526. In 1838, when the effects of teething, and hydrocephalus, are disease was the fpliowing was the epidemic, closely allied. This class of diseases is on mortality in the four quarters :the increase, as shown by Tables-

Teething.-This is rather the cause of disease than the disease itself, and should be expunged from the list of disorders. It is, however, on the decrease. In 1695 there In the were registered 1302 ; in 1699, 2268. new Tables, 1837, 954; in 1838, 780 ; in 1840, same average.

prising that

This disease in the old Tables was named Making a total of 3817. euriously, as Head-mold shot, Horse-shoe In 1840 the average deaths were 10 per head, &c. week, making an annual total of 520 ; the Thoracic Affections of Early Life.-Inflam- disease is not now epidemic. Epidemic mation of the lungs, hooping-cough, and small-pox seldom lasts more than one year. croup, carry off a large portion of the in- A storm is succeeded by a calm. The law fantile population ; and it appears that this of epidemic recurrence is little understood. class of complaints has become much more The variolous epidemics during the latter common in proportion as the encephalic dis- half of the last century were as follows :The orders of early life have diminished. decrease of some disorders, and the increase ofothers pathologically allied to them, is a very curious and interesting subject of investigation. Statistics teach us how closely allied are the sources and the forms of disThere was a remarkable absence of smallease by whICh the infantile population is pox all over Europe, from 1797 to. 1817. often carried off: they warn us that time is In the latter year it appeared in London, in often wasted in the too carefully distin- 1818; Scotland, 1819; Norwich, 1824; guishing between the disorders of the head, Sweden, 1825; London, 1826; Marseilles, chest, and stomach, which affect this period 1829-30; Germany, 1833; Ceylon, 1835; of life It should be remembered that all Copenhagen, 1838; London, 1839; North these disorders have a common origin in the America (see the account of the dreadful original delicscy of the young frame, and ravages made by small-pox in North Amethat very trifling circumstances serve mutu- rica in Captain Marryat’s "Diary in Amei rica," 1839, vol. 2.) ally to convert the one into the other. The thoracic affections seldom appear in The epidemic origin and diffusion of the old Tables previous to 1700. In 1837 ’, small-pox is too little considered : vacci-

87 nation was supposed to have banished it, but not so; this opinion arose from our ignorance of the laws of epidemic recurThere never had before been two rence. decades withoutthe presence of small-pox

epidemic. Small-pox prevailed extensively in, some parts of England in 1827;

as

an

bills give us few details ; as this was mixed up with other forms of fever. In 1837, in the second half of the year, there were 418 deaths, making 836 for the

making year.

In 1838 the weekly average an annual total of 1524.

was

29,

the total deaths in the second half of that year from the disease were 5811, which, being multiplied by 2, gave us the total of deaths 11,622. Novv, small-pox proves fatal at the rate of 20 to 25 per cent. ; therefore 11,622, multiplied by 5, would give the In 1839 the most severe epidemic scarlet fact that nearly 60,000 persons had small- fever ever known in London occurred. In pox in England in 1837 ; in London, 7830 one week, Dec.to 7, there were 82 deaths; suffered from it. In London, in 1838, there making an annual total of 4264, more than were 3817 deaths by small-pox, making, by double 1838, and quadruple 1837. a multiple of 5, the great number of between In in the first three weeks there 19 and 20,000 persons affected. This is ex- were 1840, 345 deaths by scarlet fever, 326 of traordinary, considering that 25,000 children which occurred in persons under 15 years of are annually vacèinated in London, gratis, age. The weekly average was 43, making and that no inoculation is practised. Scarlet fever is, an annual total of 2236. Small-pox is chiefly a disease of infantile therefore, still very prevalent, and its violife. In 1837, out of 1056 deaths which oc- lence falls almost wholly on the young. curred in the West of England and the disorder was first Cough.-This Hooping metropolis, where it chiefly raged, 986 were noticed by physicians in 1663. Through under 10 years of age, T0 above 10. In that century very few deaths by hooping1840, out of 42 deaths in six weeks, 29 cough were recorded. The number increased were under 15 ; 13 above 15. steadily through the seventeenth century. The deaths by small-pox during the last Chin cough first appears in the bills of morcentury, 1701-1800, were just 200,000, or tality for 1678 ; it is now greatly on the 2000 a-year. It has been wrongly asserted increase that the mortality was materially increased 1837, 2132 ; 1838,2080; 1840, 1245 ; estiby the practice of inoculation-this is one of mated on a weekly average of 24. those fallacies which are received without It is a disease almost peculiar to infantile inquiry. life. Of the 189 who have fallen victims to Deaths. it in 1840, 4 only are above 15 years old. 1701 to 1750.. no inoculation..97,546 -.

1751 ,,1800.. inoculation...102,119

The advance

dedly owing

on

hooping-c,ouh

to the diminution of

is deci-

mortality

in the half century in the other diseases of infantile life. of 4565, which is so small as hardly to Hydrophobia.—Much and justly as this merit notice ; the increase in the population disease is being the only one that than it. The deaths has never dreaded, would more explain been cured, the mortality by it from 1771 to 1800, a period of 30 years, very small. when inoculation was extensively practised, 1837 (half year) there were 7, making a , fell short by 1145 of the deaths in the first total of 15 yearly in London. In all England 30 years of the century, 1701-30, when inowere 32 deaths from it during the same culation was, excepting as a matter of ex pe- there year. riment, unknown. 1838. There were 12 deaths in London, or Measles. - There were about 500 deaths 1 a month. from measles, annually, in the old bills. 1840. None during the first 8 weeks. They have increased materially since the In the last century, the deaths by hydromiddle of the last century, as will be never exceeded 2 in a year. phobia shown by the following Table :Cholera.—Titis disease now seldom shows 1748..10 1752..111 1808..1386 itself. In 1837 there were 58 deaths by it 1749.106 1753..253.... 1810..1031 in London; m 1838, only 20. 1750.321 .... 1754.. 12 .... 1816..1106 The three epidemics of this disease in 1751. 21.... 1755..423 1831.. 750 London were in 1832-3-4. In 1837, (2nd half) 1354 X 2= 2708 epid. In 1832, from Feb. 21 to Dec. 11, there In 1838, weekly average 11 occurred 3200 deaths, or 5000, including 572 Small-pox acd measles very seldom coexist. those in the new districts. In 1838 small-pox was epidemic ; in1840, the 1833. June 25 to November 5, 1100 ; new weekly average is 16, making an annual districts, 1734. 1834. July 15 to Nov. 18, 630 ; new distotality of 832. Scarlet Fever.—There have been remark tricts, 984 ; making a total in old districts able variations in the extent and severity of of 4930 ; and, with the addition of the new scarlet fever at different periods. The old districts, 7718.

Being merely a difference

is

....

....

....

....

88 TABLE

L--.ExliiLiting

TABLE

II.—Shotving the Ravages of Small-pox in Copenhagen.

TABLE

III.—Exhibiting

the

Ravages of

the

Cholera in London 1832—33—34.

during

the Tlaree

the well-vaccinated

Population of

Ravages by Consumption in London in the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries.

*

Epidemics,

Average weekly,

t Ibid.

89 The mortality of cholera (see TABLE I.) evenly upon each of the three great groups fell almost exclusively on adults. In 1608 an into which we have divided the population,

epidemic appeared, and continued during the than is often supposed.

remainder of the century, which was called " Griping of the Guts," and destroyed 3000 annually. In 1669 there were 4385 deaths by this disease, which was, probably, a species of cholera. It ceased to appear in the Bills of Mortality, as a special disease, in 1733. The origin of it was doubtful, and it was not known whether it depended on soil, atmosphere, or animalcules.

Consumption.—The deaths by consumption in London are double those of any other disorder. It is the only disorder which retains now the same destructive character which it possessed in the earliest periods to whichour statistical researches extend. In 1657, when there appeared the oldest bill extant, having the names of the diseases attached, out of a total mortality of 12,434,

Typhus Fevel’ is one of the great scourges of the metropolis, but is singularly variable in its intensity. From the earliest records of metropolitan mortality to the present time, typhus has been one of the chief diseases by which the population is thinned. 1837 (half-year), 1933 X 2 = 3866, it was then epidemic ; 1838, 78 weekly, making a total of 4078; it was also epidemic this year; 1839, less than the half of 1838 ; and in 1840 the weekly average is only 26, makiug a yearly total of 1350; it is not now epidemic. It attacks equally all ages. In the second week of January, 1840, it proved fatal to 9 young, 9 adults, and 9 aged persons. Generally speaking, however, it attacks adults most frequently. The cause of discrepancy in the amount and severity of the disease is owing to the greater comparative comforts of the lower orders in

one-fifth of them, or 2757, were from consumption. The proportion (see TABLE III.) varies London. between one-fifth and one-seventh, the aveThe amount of typhus is always proporrage being one-sixth ; the same proportions tioned to the necessitous condition of the exist at the present time. poorer classes of society. In seasons of 1837 (half-year), 3877 deaths were by scarcity aad commercial difficulty, when consumption, out of a total mortality of bread is dear, or the money to buy it is 24,959. wanting, typhus prevails. 1838. Weekly average is 142, being Child-birth.—Thedeaths from this cause, 7600 by consumption. In 1840 the weekly average is 142, giving in the latter period of the 17th century, amounted to 150 annually, and in the early a total for the year of 7384. There are 20 deaths daily in London from periods of the 18th century to 200. It was always singularly uniform in regard to its consumption. In the second week of January the deaths numbers :-In 1827, it was 272 ; 1829,264; 166. There is no perceptible difference between the deaths in the metropolis and other districts from this disease. In 1839, out of 4081 total deaths in Devonshire, 835 were from consumption, being nearly one-fifth. In Cornwall, out of 2440 deaths, 540 were from consumption, or one in four and a half. The object of statistics is not merely to satisfy idle curiosity, but to benefit manFacts had pointed out the small ]kind. benefit derived in consumption from removal to a western climate. As many cases originated in Jamaica as in England ; 13 in the 1000 was the proportion of soldiers attacked by consumption in Jamaica, while it was only 6 per 1000 in England. Black people coming to this country suffer excessively from consumption. Therefore, it is clear that the structure of the lung which is adapted for cold climates is unfavourable to hot ones, and vice versa. Consumption attacks all ages, but chiefly the adult and middle periods of life. The weekly average is under 15.26; adults, 108 ; aged, 9 ; making a total of 143. It appears from this Table, bearing in mind the numbers living at each respective period of life, were

that the mortality of

consumption

falls

more

1833, 275 ; 1836, 277. In 1837, under the Tables, it was 390 ; 1838, 416 ; and the

new

average of 1840 would be 312. It had been calculated, in a previous part of the lecture,that there were 70,000 births annually in London ; therefore an average of 400 deaths yearly, as evidenced by the results of the last three years’ registration, gives only 1 death in 175 cases of childbirth, being 174 to 1 in favour of the mother. Throughout England and Wales, Mr. Farr considers that the proportion of fatal cases is still smaller, not exceeding 1 in 250 births.

Deaths by Violence form a very considerable item in the sources of metropolitan mortality; about l-40th of the whole. The average of 1838 was 25 weekly, out of 1013, making a total of 1300 in the year ! Heart Affections.—These

were

not noticed

in the old Bills of Mortality. They are now very frequent in all ranks of society, and constitute a notable proportion of the annual deaths. In all England, during the second half of 1837, 1596X 2=3192, fell a sacrifice to heart affections in a mortality of 150,000. In the metropolis, during the same period, 366X .2=712 deaths occurred from this.

90 In 1838, the weekly average of deaths from heart disease was 16, making OPERATION FOR LARYNGITIS.In 1840, a total annual mortality of 832. DISCOVERY, INSTEAD, OF AN the weekly average is 21, or 1085 yearly. AORTAL ANEURYSM. These diseases occur to the young, the adult, and the aged ; chiefly, however, among the To the Editor of THE LANCET. adults. This increase is owing partly to the actual increase of the disease, and partly SIR:—Should the following case (which to its being better known and understood. came to my recollection when reading a paper by Mr. Caesar Hawkins, "On the Apoplexy and Palsy begin, to prevail soon Diagnosis of Foreign Bodies in the Larynx," of after the 40th year life, and continue a and the discussion which ensued at a meet. great source of mortality from that period ing of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical to the age of 70. Next to natural decay, it Feb. 11, 1840, published in THE is the most frequent form of disease by Society, be worth noticing, I shall feel LANCET,) which the aged population is carried off. by your giving it a place in your obliged In 1837 (second half) there were 826 deaths valuable Journal. I am, Sir, your most by it, or 1652 in the year. In 1833, there servant, were 1716 deaths from it; and in 1840, E.R. during the first eight weeks, there had been March 26, 1840. Poutllanfraeth, 153 deaths by it in persons over 60, and 121 in those below this age, making a total A robust man, from 35 to 40 years of age, of 1781 in the year. was admitted into one ofthemedical wards of the Edinburgh Infirmary, in the early part of Decay of Nature chiefly occurs after 60, 1839, with symptoms of laryngitis, for which although the powers of life sometimes steal his throat was blistered, and other remedies away between the ages of 40 and 60, consti- were administered, without any alleviation tuting premature old age. In 1837 (irst of his sufferings. The difficulty of respi. half) there were 1690 registered as dying ration becoming more urgent, tracheotomy of decay of nature, making a grand total of was considered necessary, and Mr. Syme 3380. In 1838, the weekly average was 79, (who was, I believe, in the surgical hospital making a total of 4108. There is great diver- at the time) was requested to see the case sity in the proportions of persons dying of immediately. He came, and lost no time old age in different parts of England. A few before the operation was performed. I am isolated cases of longevity prove nothing; sure that Mr. S., and those who were prebut a large and steady proportion of deaths sent, will not soon forget the countenance at above 70, is strong presumptive proof of the man at that moment. Terror and of healthy locality. In 1837, in all England agony both combined gave to his features and Wales, of 1000 deaths, 145 of the per- a most horrific appearance. His convulsive sons were above 70. In the North-Riding efforts rendered it very difficult for the of Yorkshire, the proportion is 210 in the operation to be performed, which gave no 1000. Contrast this with the mortality in relief, for he died instantaneously. On the following day the body was inpersons above 70 in crowded populationsLondon (above 70), 104 per 1000; Birming- spected. The larynx, with the trachea, ham, 81; Liverpool, 63. nearly to its bifurcation, was removed and In the course of his lecture, Dr. Gregory carefully examined, but, to the surprise of paid some well-deserved compliments to all present, there was no lesion to account the Registrar-General for his enlightened de- for either the symptoms or the sudden monstration of the Registration Act, and to death ; but Mr. Fergusson, the respected Mr. Farr for his labours, and the assistance and talented lecturer on surgery, on exhe had rendered him in the composition of ploring the thorax, detected an aneurysm of his lecture, which he concluded by express- the arch of the aorta. The above case suggests to our minds ing a hope that he had thrown a degree of interest around the new system of registra- many important considerations. What was tion, and demonstrated the great accuracy the cause of the symptoms ? Did the same with which it was carried on.—(Cheerang.) cause produce the sudden death ? were produced by inIf the [We are indebted to the kindness of Dr. Bammationsymptoms of the mucous membrane, or Gregory for the last part of the foregoing infiltration into the loose submucous cellulecture. Time only allowed him to give lar tissue, about the rima glottidis, which about half of it to his numerous auditory might have subsided after death, then the in the Royal Institution; he was good operation would have produced relief; in considering the therefore we are enough, however, to furnish us with such cause to have beenjustified either in the chest or the copious notes of the latter portion as have brain. (I am sorry to say that the brain enabled us to complete the subject.-Re was not examined.) If in the thorax, the of the would pressure aneurysm on the porter,

cause.

obedient

Lancet.]